Assignments

Afterthoughts - student reflection assignments

Afterthoughts: An Assignment that Gets Students Thinking

Our March installment in the collection of materials on assignments included an assignment template we proposed could be used as part of the assignment design process. We used the template to describe an assignment in which students read the syllabus and responded to it in

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writing better assignments

Assignment Prompts: A Tutor’s Perspective

Nothing has informed my teaching practice as much as serving as a writing tutor for high school and college students. It has been sobering to see, through their eyes, how unclear our assignments can sometimes be. Believe me, I’m guilty too. In fact, it’s the

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assignment template promotes clarity

A Template for Assignment Development and Clarity

For our next installment in this series on assignments, we’d like to share an assignment template that we think can be helpful to teachers and students. Let’s start with how it can help teachers. It’s no surprise that we think many teachers could do a

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assignment details - too many

Assignment Details: What if You Provide Too Many?

In an era of hyper-focus on students’ academic performance, is it possible that schoolwork is actually too easy? I recognize that this might seem a strange question, given how much we hear of stressed-out students, slogging through hours of homework and blizzards of standardized tests.

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assignment details - too few

Assignment Details: What if You Provide Too Few?

I am thankful for Jennifer Trainor’s insightful “Assignment Details: What if You Provide Too Many?” She raises what should be a real concern for teaching professors: Am I doing too much for my students? In other words, are teachers compromising student learning when we compose

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students confused over assignment

What Happens When an Assignment Is Unclear?

This installment of our continuing series on assignments is devoted to assignment clarity. We believe that many good assignments fall short of achieving what faculty expect because students struggle to understand what they are to do and why they are doing it. The assignment description

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I don't understand what you want in this assignment

“I Don’t Understand What You Want in This Assignment”

We’re interested in assignments. To us, they seem like a vital aspect of instruction that goes largely unexamined. What sparked our interest was the way students so often respond to written assignments: “What do you want?” or “I don’t understand what you want in this

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using assignments effectively

Assignments: A Theme for the Coming Semester

One of the luxuries of this online format that we didn’t have when The Teaching Professor was a print publication is the ability to pursue topics more thoroughly, to come at them from different directions, and to assemble collections of resources related to them. We

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building transparency into assignments

Building Transparency into Our Assignments

In education, transparency is typically described as making teaching and learning visible. “Transparent teaching involves making the implicit explicit for students so they understand why they are engaged in certain tasks and what role the course plays in their learning journey,” according to a recent

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unpacking the critical thinking conundrum

Unpacking the Critical Thinking Conundrum

When I was an undergraduate, I distinctly remember my political science professor informing the class, “If you take one thing away from your education, learn how to think critically by the time you leave here.” At that point in my life, his sage wisdom went

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Our March installment in the collection of materials on assignments included an assignment template we proposed could be used as part of the assignment design process. We used the template to describe an assignment in which students read the syllabus and responded to it in writing. We plan to continue using the template to illustrate interesting and innovative assignments—ones that can be widely used, in different courses, and with various kinds of content.

The inspiration for this month’s template comes from a 2017 article by Julie Empric in which she describes an assignment that tackles a problem that occurs in many courses. Students leave class or log out online and forget about what happened in the session. Empric’s assignment gets students thinking about what happened in the session—how the content relates to what’s in the reading or what’s been covered in previous sessions, questions, thoughts, ideas they have in response to the material, examples where they see it at work, or situations where it relates and could be applied.

Empric calls these assignments “Afterthoughts” and has students share their “Afterthoughts” in class as part of their participation grade. If the assignment is of interest, we’d encourage you to read why Empric opted for an assignment like this, how she’s using it, and how her students have responded to it.

One of the things we like about Empric’s assignment is how flexible it is. You can use it in lots of different ways and to accomplish different objectives. Here’s a rundown of some of the options that came to us.

Finally, this is an assignment that can be handled in manageable ways. Take a look at these suggestions.

With all these assignments, there’s a need adapt, change, and adjust them so that they fit with how you teach, the course content, other assignments in the course, and the learning needs of your students. When Gary used this assignment in his composition course, he called it “Afterwords” (Maryellen thinks that’s a clever title modification given the course). His students have a “daily writing” assignment and Afterwords can fulfill the writing their obligated to provide. He identifies seven kinds of Afterwords and lets students select the one they want to do, while encouraging them to use different kinds across the assignment. His set of assessment criteria each have three levels, which he can check off quickly.

Check out the assignment template that follows. We’ve formatted it so that it could be given to students in lieu of the more typical assignment description. It’s detailed but as we’ve noted in earlier discussions of assignments, we think it’s useful to identify for students what knowledge and skills the assignment will develop. And if they’re beginning students, the task lists answers to common student questions about what it is you want in this assignment. That may be especially important in this case since the assignment is not one students have experienced in other courses.

Download Afterthoughts assignment template »